Solid freeform fabrication of easily removeable support constructions for 3-D printing

ABSTRACT

A support construction for a volume generated by solid freeform fabrication, where the support construction includes layers of supporting materials, such layers comprising a continuous strip of material within such volume such that when the strip is lifted or pulled, the layers of supporting materials including the strip are removed together from the volume.

CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application is a Continuation Application of U.S. patentapplication Ser. No. 13/149,271, filed May 31, 2011 which is herebyincorporated in its entirety.

FIELD OF THE INVENTION

The invention relates to Solid Freeform Fabrication (SFF) or layer bylayer three-dimensional printing, and in particular to supportconstructions that may be easily removed from a printedthree-dimensional object.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

SFF is a process in which three-dimensional (3D) objects are constructedutilizing a computer model of the objects. These processes are used forexample for visualization, demonstration and mechanical prototyping ofobjects.

One SFF technique, known as 3D printing, is performed by layer-by-layerinkjet deposition of building materials. Depending on the materials, thelayers are then cured or solidified. The process of layer by layerdeposition and solidification is repeated until a 3D object is formed.The building materials may include modeling materials and supportingmaterials, which form the object and the temporary support constructionssupporting the object as it is being built, e.g. where objects includeoverhanging features or shapes, e.g. curved geometries, negative angles,voids, and so on. After completion of printing, support constructionsare generally removed to reveal the final shape of the fabricatedobject.

Generally speaking, during SFF a material is deposited to produce thedesired object and another material is deposited to provide support forspecific areas of the object during building, and to assure adequatevertical placement of subsequent object layers. In some cases, the samematerial is used for forming both the object and the support structuressupporting it. The materials may be initially liquid or viscous and aresubsequently hardened to form the required layer shape. The hardeningprocess may be performed by a variety of methods, e.g. cooling or UVcuring.

Removal of a support structure from an object may be difficult and timeconsuming, and may also damage the final formed object. It wouldtherefore be advantageous to have a method of SFF enabling easy,inexpensive, fast and convenient removal of support constructions from afabricated object.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

Some embodiments of the invention may include a method of constructing asupport construction through a process of fabricating a threedimensional (3D) object, where the method includes selectivelydepositing in layers, layer by layer, a modeling material according tocross-sectional layers of the 3D object, selectively depositing in thelayers to form a support construction, a first and second supportingmaterials, where the first and second supporting materials are depositedin a volume designed to be an empty space in the 3D object, and wherethe support construction includes a strip of the first supportingmaterial where such strip intersects the layers in the volume; andremoving the support construction from the volume upon application of alifting force on the strip.

In some embodiments, the strip may be configured as a coil within thevolume.

Some embodiments may further include depositing the second supportingmaterial between an edge of the modeling material in the layer and anedge of the support construction comprising the first and secondsupporting materials in the layer, to form a release layer surroundingthe support construction.

Some embodiments may include depositing a plurality of layers comprisingthe second supporting material before depositing layers comprising themodeling material and the first and second supporting materials, wheresaid layers comprising modeling material and first and second supportingmaterials are deposited on top of said layers comprising secondsupporting material.

Some embodiments may include a method of constructing a supportconstruction in a process of fabricating a three dimensional (3D)object, where the method includes selectively depositing, layer bylayer, a modeling material according to cross-sectional layers of the 3Dobject being constructed and a first and a second supporting materialsthat are configured as a support construction in a volume that isdesigned as an empty space in the 3D object. In some embodiments, thesupport construction includes a strip of the first supporting materialthat intersects horizontal layers in the volume, and the supportconstruction includes a second supporting material that fills in atleast a portion of the volume not filled by the first supportingmaterial. In some embodiments, upon application of a lifting force onthe strip of first material, the strip and the second supportingmaterial are removed from the volume.

Some embodiments may include selectively depositing a second supportingmaterial on at least a point between the modeling material and the firstand second support materials forming the support construction in alayer.

In some embodiments, selectively depositing the first supportingmaterial includes selectively depositing the first supporting materialas a continuous strip intersecting support construction layers.

Some embodiments may include a method of producing a supportconstruction by solid freeform fabrication, where such method mayinclude depositing a first layer of the support construction, a firstarea of the first layer including a first material, and a second area ofthe first layer including a second material; and depositing, over thefirst layer, a second layer of the support construction, where a firstarea of the second layer includes the first material and a second areaof the second layer includes the second material, where the first areaof the first layer adheres to a portion but not all of the first area ofthe second layer. In some embodiments, upon application of a pullingforce to the first area of the first layer, at least a portion of thefirst layer is removed from the support construction, and the first areaof the first layer conveys the pulling force to the first area of thesecond layer, and a portion of the first layer and a portion of thesecond layer are removed from the support construction.

In some embodiments, the first material may be deposited on an area ofthe first layer that is more than half of the first layer, and the firstmaterial may be deposited on an area of the second layer that includesmore than half of the second layer.

In some embodiments, the first material in the first layer and thesecond layer forms a continuous strip of first material through thefirst layer and the second layer.

In some embodiments, an area of first material in the first layer and anarea of first material in the second layer include an area that has avertical axis at a center of the area of first material in the first andthe second layers, where a vertical axis in the first layer intersectswith a vertical axis in the second layer.

In some embodiments, the first area in the second layer intersects witha bottom of the second layer and a top of the second layer at congruentangles, and the first area in the first layer intersects with a bottomof the first layer and with a top of the first layer at substantiallycongruent angles, all of such angles being non-right angles.

In some embodiments, a set of layers of supporting materials fills avolume of the support construction.

Some embodiments of the invention may include a support construction fora volume constructed by solid freeform fabrication, where such volumeincludes a first material deposited in an area of several layers of thevolume and an area of a second material among such layers, where thefirst material has a tensile strength sufficient to lift the severallayers of the first material when a first portion of the area comprisingthe first material is lifted above the support construction.

In some embodiments, the area of the first material is configured as astrip among the layers of the second material, and a layer of the secondmaterial is a layer situated above the strip relative to a direction ofthe lift.

In some embodiments, the strip is configured as a helix among the layersof the second material.

In some embodiments, the support construction includes an area of secondsupporting material surrounding the support construction layers.

In some embodiments, the support construction includes an areacomprising layers of second supporting material beneath the layerscomprising both model construction and support construction portions.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

The subject matter regarded as the invention is particularly pointed outand distinctly claimed in the concluding portion of the specification.The invention, however, both as to organization and method of operation,together with objects, features, and advantages thereof, may beunderstood by reference to the following detailed description when readwith the accompanying drawings in which:

FIG. 1 is a schematic representation of a 3D printing system using solidfreeform fabrication according to embodiments of the invention;

FIG. 2A is a schematic representation of layers of supporting materialsthat include an area of first material and an area of second materialaccording to embodiments of the invention;

FIG. 2B is a schematic representation of layers of the object and itssupport construction;

FIG. 3A is a cut-away view of a support construction comprising layersthat include an area of a first material and an area of a secondmaterial according to embodiments of the invention;

FIG. 3B is a cut away view of a support construction filing a volumewithin an object; and

FIGS. 3C and 3D are schematic diagrams of a supporting material beingpulled from a model, in accordance with an embodiment of the invention

DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

The following description is presented to enable one of ordinary skillin the art to make and use the invention as provided in the context of aparticular application and its requirements. Various modifications tothe described embodiments will be apparent to those with skill in theart, and the general principles defined herein may be applied to otherembodiments. Therefore, the present invention is not intended to belimited to the particular embodiments shown and described, but is to beaccorded the widest scope consistent with the principles and novelfeatures herein disclosed. In other instances, well-known methods,procedures, and components have not been described in detail so as notto obscure the present invention. It is to be understood that thephraseology and terminology employed herein is for the purpose ofdescription and should not be regarded as limiting.

In addition to its regular meaning, the terms “strong” and “strength” inthis specification and claims may refer to the relative difference inmodulus of elasticity among materials such as modeling materials andsupport materials or combinations of such materials. The strength of amaterial may be described, for example, by reference to its modulus ofelasticity, which may be defined as the ratio of stress to itscorresponding strain under given conditions of load, for materials thatdeform elastically, according to Hooke's law. In some embodiments, theterm ‘strength’ may include a propensity of a material to adhere toanother material and particularly to adhere to a similar material withwhich it is brought into contact. Strength may also include a relativetensile strength of the material.

The term “supporting material” as used throughout the specification andclaims may comprise a material or materials that are not part of thefinal 3D object, and which are used to provide provisional supportduring solid freeform fabrication of a three-dimensional object. Asupport construction formed using such supporting materials may includematerials that are different to the modeling materials used to fabricatethe three-dimensional object, or modeling materials and supportmaterials that are different to the modeling materials used to fabricatethe three-dimensional object. Alternatively, one of the supportingmaterials may be a modeling material which is the same as a modelingmaterial used in fabricating the three dimensional object.

The term ‘coil’ as used in this application and in addition to itsregular meaning may include a film, wire, or sheet that follows acurved, circular or partially circular path within a plain. The term‘helix’ as used in this application and in addition to its regularmeaning may include a smooth curve of a film, wire, or sheet inthree-dimensional space that may be characterized by the fact that atangent at any point makes a constant with a fixed axis.

While the SFF system described herein for carrying out the methods ofthe invention is a 3D inkjet printing system, the methods of theinvention are not limited to 3D inkjet printing and may be carried outby other SFF systems and methods.

Building materials in SFF may be categorized into two major categories:modeling material and support material. The modeling material isgenerally a composition which is formulated for use in SFF to form a 3Dobject. The support material generally serves to provide a supportstructure for supporting the object, e.g. overhanging object partsduring the fabricating process and/or other purposes, e.g., fillingvoids, to provide hollow or porous objects.

In an embodiment of the invention, more than one modeling material andmore than one supporting material may be used for forming each of theobject and the support construction, each material being deposited by adifferent printing head in the SFF system, whereby two or more materialsmay be deposited simultaneously within a layer to form different partsof the same layer.

By simultaneously depositing the different materials from differentprint heads to form a layer, different layers of the three-dimensionalobject having different moduli of elasticity and different strengths maybe produced. For example, a given layer may comprise, in parts: a modellayer (otherwise known as an object construction), a support layer(otherwise known as a support construction) and a release layer(otherwise known as a release construction). In accordance withembodiments of the present invention, layers of materials deposited bythe apparatus during the printing process may include a combination ofone or more model constructions, support constructions and/or releaseconstructions, i.e. each forming a different part or area of the layer,according to the requirements of the three-dimensional object beingprinted. Thus, when referring to object layers, support layers and/orrelease layers, any or all of these may be part or parts comprising asingle whole ‘layer’ printed by the printing apparatus during the SFFprocess.

Generation of the 3D support construction is performed according to thegeometry of the object in question, using designated software algorithmswell known in the art.

The invention provides a method of constructing a support constructionwithin a volume using SFF. Such construction may include depositingmaterials in horizontal layers to form said support construction, wherethe support construction comprises a strip of a first materialintersecting at least two horizontal layers in the volume, anddepositing in the volume a second material in the horizontal layers inareas not filled by the first material, so that upon an application of alifting or pulling force on the strip, the strip of first material aswell as all or part of the second material are removed together from thevolume. In some embodiments, the strip may be configured as a coil orhelix within the support construction volume and extend from a bottomlayer of the volume to a top layer of the volume. The second material ineach layer interfaces with the first material in the layer, and may ormay not weakly adhere or connect to the strip of first material in thelayer. The first material and the second material are depositedsimultaneously, layer upon layer within the volume, each forming a partof each consecutive support construction layer.

In some embodiments, a method for creating a support construction by SFFmay include depositing a first layer of the support construction, wherethe first layer includes at least two interfacing areas, a first of suchareas comprising a first material, and a second area comprising a secondmaterial. In some embodiments, the first material may have a relativelyhigh tensile strength and be deposited such that it forms part of acoil, strip or sheet passing through the layer. Over the first layer,there may be deposited a second layer of the support construction thatalso includes a first area made of a first material and a second areamade of a second material, where such first and second areas interfacewith and/or are connected to each other in each respective layer, andwhere the first area of the first layer is adhered to at least a portionbut preferably not all of the first area of said second layer. Theadhered first areas of the two layers may, upon application of a pullingforce to the first or outer layer, result in at least a portion of thefirst layer being removed from the support construction volume, and in aconveying of the pulling force from the first area of the first layer tothe first area of the second layer, result in a remainder of the firstlayer and at least a portion of the second layer being pulled andremoved from the support volume at the same time.

Some embodiments may include a method of constructing a supportconstruction in a process of printing a three dimensional (3D) object,where the method includes selectively depositing, layer by layer, amodeling material according to cross-sectional layers of the 3D objectbeing constructed and a first and a second supporting materials that areconfigured as a support construction in a volume that is designed as anempty space in the 3D object. In some embodiments, the supportconstruction includes a strip of the first supporting material thatintersects horizontal layers in the volume, and the support constructionincludes a second supporting material that fills in at least a portionof the volume not filled by the first supporting material.

According to the present invention, the first material in the first andsecond layers may form a continuous strip through the layers. In someembodiments, such strip of first material may have a tensile strengthsufficient to lift two or more layers when a portion of an area of firstmaterial is pulled or lifted away from the level of the outer surface ofthe support construction.

In some embodiments, the first material may be configured as a strip offirst material within the layers of the support construction, and thesecond material in the first and subsequent layers may be configured tobe situated adjacent to, below and/or above the strip, relative to adirection of a pulling or lifting force. In some embodiments, the stripmay be configured as a helix of first material among and within, e.g.interspersed with the second material in the accumulated layers formingthe support construction.

In some embodiments, the first layer comprising at least a portion ofthe first material and a portion of the second material may be precededby one or more layers comprising only the second material. The precedingone or more layers form a ‘pedestal’ of supporting material, prior toformation of the 3D object and its support constructions on top of thepedestal, e.g. for easy lifting of the entire fabrication (object andsupport construction's) off the printing tray after completion of theprinting process.

In some embodiments, an area of first material in each layer may share avertical axis located at or near a center of the areas of first materialin the layers, such that such areas are at least partially connected onsuch vertical axis throughout at least part of the support constructionlayers, and where such connected area may form a screw or spiral shapeon a vertical axis of the several layers.

In some embodiments, layers comprising the support construction maysubstantially fill a support construction volume within at least part ofthe object construction. In some embodiments, a release layer comprisinga seam of second material may be deposited on a boundary orcircumference of the part of a layer comprising the supportconstruction, i.e.

between the support construction and the volume of modeling materialforming the object. The release layer further enables easy removal ofthe support construction from the volume on completion of the printingprocess.

Reference is made to FIG. 1, a schematic depiction of an SFF system inaccordance with an embodiment of the invention. System 100 may include aprinting tray 102 upon which may be constructed an object being printed104. System 100 may include a series of cartridges 106, 107 and 108 thatmay include one or more materials that may be used in the 3D printingprocess to fabricate object 104. Cartridges 106, 107 and 108 may beconnected to pumps or valves 110, 111 and 112 that may feed materialsfrom cartridges 106, 107 and 108 to a series of printing heads 116, 117and 118, respectively. Each printing head comprises a separate number ofnozzles or an array of nozzles (119) via which materials are deposited.Printing heads 116, 117 and 118 may be mounted in a printing block 115which may move over the printing tray 102 in X and/or Y directionsdepositing materials in its path via nozzles 119 associated with eachindividual printing head in order to form each layer. Computer 114 whichmay include or be associated with a processor 120 and a memory 122, mayregulate functions of one or more or cartridges 106, 107 and 108,pumps/valves 110, 111 and 112 and printing heads 116, 117 and 118, tocontrol layer by layer deposition of the one or more materials to beused in the printing process to fabricate object 104. Cartridge 106 maystore and feed via valve 110 to printing head 116 a solidifiablemodeling material to form the layers of and thus the final 3D object.Cartridge 107 may store and feed via valve 111 to printing head 117 adifferent solidifiable material, e.g. a strong, high tensile strengthmodeling material to form layers of the object or, as in the presentembodiment, layers of a high-tensile strength support construction,hereinafter the “first supporting material” or “first material”.Cartridge 108 may store and feed via valve 112 to printing head 118 aweak, e.g. semi-solid or gel-like support material, hereinafter the“second supporting material” or “second material”, to form parts of thelayers of the support construction of the invention, and optionallyother constructions as referred to hereinafter, e.g. a release layer.

In some embodiments, 3D object 104 being printed may include a volume124 of modeling material which will form the final object, and a volume126 that is to be printed primarily of supporting materials to provide asupport construction for the object being printed, where volume 124 ofmodeling material surrounds and/or is supported by volume 126. Forexample, volume 126 may form the base or inside of a concave or asemispheric object design, the outside of which is printed with one ormore modeling materials to form the final object. Other object designsand other shapes of volume 126 are possible. After the SFF process iscomplete, the support construction filling volume 126 is removed fromthe object.

In some embodiments, a release layer e.g. a seam of second material (notshown) may be printed or deposited onto a boundary or circumference of asupport construction layer, i.e. between the support construction andthe volume of modeling material forming the object. For example, in FIG.1, such release layer may be deposited such that it is situated betweenlayer parts of volume 124 and layer parts of volume 126, i.e. at theinterface between them in the layer, to allow for ease of separation ofa part comprising the support construction from a part comprising theobject being fabricated.

Reference is made to FIG. 2A, a schematic representation of layers ofsupporting material including an area of another supporting material,according to embodiments of the invention. Volume 126 is printedlayer-by-layer, such layers being in a substantially parallel horizontalplane relative to each other. FIG. 2A represents three layers comprisingparts of volume 126: layers 202, 212 and 218 respectively, where layer202 represents a first and outer layer of the support constructionvolume 126 as depicted in FIG. 1. When the SFF process is complete andthe object and its support construction are removed from the printingtray 102, layer 202 will be an outer, i.e. exposed layer of supportconstruction and thus easily accessible to a user or operator. Area 204of layer 202, may cover for example two thirds, three quarters oranother portion of layer 202, and may include a first supportingmaterial 206, while area 208 of layer 202 may include a second,different supporting material 210.

In a preferred embodiment, the first material used in the supportingconstruction of the invention is a harder, sturdier, more adhesive orstronger material, e.g. a high tensile strength modeling material 206,than the second material used in said supporting construction, which isa weaker, gel-like material 210.

Material 206 may be a different modeling material to the modelingmaterial or materials used to form object volume 124. As indicated inFIG. 2A, area 204 of high-tensile material 206 interfaces with one ormore points of area 208 within the layer, such that area 204 and area208 together form a single layer 202.

A second layer 212 may likewise be printed to include an area 214 ofhi-tensile strength first material 206 and area 216 of weaker, secondsupporting material 210, such that areas 214 and 216 likewise interfacewith each other within the layer to form a single layer 212 that isprinted over or above layer 202. Area 214 may be connected with area 204over some, though preferably not all of the surface area of such areas214 and 204, such that areas 214 and 204 may share some thoughpreferably not all of their vertical axis. The portions of strongermaterial 206 in such two areas 214 and 204 that are connected, areadhered to each other at the time of or following the printing of layer212. Since FIG. 2A is a schematic representation of construction layers,it may be understood for example that areas 214 and 204 may be adheredto each other directly or via adherence between similarly portioned,stronger, hi-tensile strength first material portions in one or moreintervening layers.

At the same time, only a portion of area 208 at the top of layer 202 isin contact with and weakly adhered to a portion of area 216 thatintersects with a bottom of layer 212.

Likewise, layer 218 comprises an area of hi-tensile strength firstmaterial 206 and an area of weaker support material 210, where theportion of material 206 in layer 218 which is substantially above theportion of material 206 in layer 212 in the vertical direction, isadhered to the portion of material 206 in layer 212 with which it comesinto contact. Portions of areas comprising weaker second supportmaterial 210 (areas 220 and 216) are similarly in contact between thetwo layers 218 and 212. Repeatedly connected, adhered portions of thelayers 202, 212 and 218, may share a vertical axis.

In some embodiments, the stronger first high tensile strength materialis deposited in layers, and its areas of deposition in each layer runsat a slope or incline of for example 30-60° from a bottom of a layer toa top of the layer. The bottom edge of the strong material at the bottomsurface of the layer may be connected or adhered to the top edge of thestrong material of a layer below it, so that the high tensile strengthfirst material forms a continuous strip, such as a ribbon or coilthrough the accumulating layers of the support construction. In someembodiments, the strip of strong material in the various layers may runparallel to each other such that the angles of intersection of the stripof strong material in a top and bottom of a first layer may be congruentto the angles of intersection of the strip at the top and bottom ofother layers, and such angles may be other than right angles.

In some embodiments, the tensile strength of material 206 is sufficientto withstand a pulling force such that a pulling force applied to region204 of layer 202 will also lift 206 material containing regions adheredto it in layers 212 and 218. In a preferred embodiment, when a pullingor lifting force is applied to a part of outer layer 202, such as toarea 204, such pulling or lifting force drags along with it part or allof area 208 interfacing with it in layer 202. Area 204 conveys thepulling or lifting force to area 214 of layer 212 and in turn to area224 of layer 218, since the 206 material-containing areas of the threelayers are adhered together, (directly or via one or more interveninglayers, as aforesaid). Thus by exerting a pulling force for example onan area of stronger material 206 of an outer or exposed layer 202 of asupport construction, one or more adhered layers, e.g., layers 212 and218 of such support construction are also lifted or pulled out of volume200 in the same pulling or lifting motion. Some or all of the layers involume 126, as represented in FIG. 2A by layers 202, 212 and 218, arelifted from volume 126 by a pulling force exerted on a single region 204of an exposed or outer layer of the support construction in volume 126.

In some embodiments, planar orientation of area 216 of weaker material210 in layer 212 may be rotated relative to the orientation and locationof region 208 in layer 202 and relative to the orientation and locationof region 220 of layer 218 below and above such layer 212, such that theregions of stronger material 206 in the accumulated layers form ahelical or spiral shape through the various layers making up volume 126,partially separated by weaker material 210. While the layers depicted inFIG. 2A indicate a significant rotation of the 210 material area fromone layer to another, the depicted layers are to be understood as beingsolely a graphic representation of different layers. In 3D printing, thelayers making up 3D constructions are very thin, for example a layer mayhave a thickness in the region of 20 microns, and therefore between eachlayer as depicted in FIG. 2A there may be several intervening layers.

At least a portion of an area of high tensile strength material 206 in alayer may be in contact with and adhered to at least some portion ofhigh tensile strength material 206 in both the layer above and the layerbelow. In some embodiments, a pulling or lifting force applied to theouter or exposed layer 202 of the support construction, may smoothlylift and remove some or all of the subsequent layers 212 and 218 of thesupport construction.

In some embodiments of the invention, the hard, solidifiable modelingmaterial forming the 3D object may be for example FullCure® 830VeroWhite (available from Objet Geometries Ltd., Israel), the stronger,high tensile strength first material 206 may be include for exampleTangoPlus™ (available from Objet Geometries Ltd., Israel), and theweaker, gel-like second support material 210 may be or include forexample FullCure® 705 (available from Objet Geometries Ltd., Israel).Other materials having relatively similar properties may also be used.Using 3D inkjet printing heads, all of the materials are in liquid formwhen deposited. Any or all of the materials may also be in liquid format ambient temperature prior to deposition. After being deposited in alayer, the materials are generally exposed to a source of curing, e.g.UV radiation; however other processes for solidification of any or allof the materials may be used. The properties of the materials described,e.g. hard solidifiable material, high-tensile strength material andweak, gel-like material, respectively, are the properties exhibited byeach respective material after deposition and exposure to curingradiation or other solidification process.

FIG. 2B is a schematic representation of layers or ‘slices’ A-H of anobject with a supporting structure being fabricated by SFF according toembodiments of the invention. The layers or slices are numbered, andfrom such slice numbers it is evident that slices A-H are distancedseveral slices apart. As aforesaid, an exemplary slice is very thin,e.g. may have a thickness of only about 20 microns, thus despite thesmall difference in vertical height between the slices shown, they arein effect separated by many such intervening slices.

In some embodiments, the first layer of the object and its supportconstruction being printed, may be preceded by one or more layerscomprising only the second material, such preceding support materiallayers forming a ‘pedestal’ of support material prior to formation ofthe 3D object and its support constructions on top of the pedestal, e.g.for easy lifting of the entire fabrication (object+supportconstruction/s) off the printing tray after completion of printing.

Accordingly, layer A shows one of the first, preceding slices fabricatedin the 3D printing process, i.e. a pedestal slice comprising the weakersecond supporting material. Optionally, the weaker second supportingmaterial may be dispersed with minute elements of a different materialfor improved support capability. As aforesaid, a number of such firstslices are printed to form a pedestal prior to commencing printing theobject and its supporting construction/s on top of the pedestal.

Layer B depicts one of the first slices of the object being fabricated,where the external criss-cross area represents the part of the layerwhich will form part of the final 3D object itself, for example asindicated by object volume 124 in FIG. 1. The inner diagonal lined anddotted areas represent the supporting construction, printed for exampleas indicated by supporting volume 126 in FIG. 1. As may be seen in thedepiction of Layer B, the inner support construction comprises twodifferent areas: a diagonal-lined area covering most of the supportconstruction layer area, and a smaller, dotted area, covering a small‘wedge’ shaped section of the layer. The diagonal-lined area iscomprised of hi-tensile strength first material and the dotted areacomprises a weaker second supporting material similar to that making upthe pedestal slices.

As may be seen by comparing each of Layers B and C, Layers C and D,Layers D and E and Layers E and F, despite the fact that each pair isseparated by between 5-15 intervening slices, each layer shown appearsvery similar in layout to its preceding layer, except for a very slightrotation of the dotted wedge area of weaker material within each layerof strong material, from slice to slice. In each consecutive slice, thearea comprising strong material covers most of the area of strongmaterial preceding it, with a very slight variation, i.e. rotation, andthe wedge area comprising weak material mostly covers the wedge area ofweak material in the slice preceding it, with a very slight variation,i.e. rotation.

Where the material in each slice covers and therefore is in directcontact with its same material in the preceding slice, the two materialsadhere to each other, leaving only a very thin portion of the materialnot adhered to its same material in the preceding slice. This process isrepeated slice after slice, or layer after layer, with minimal rotationof the placement, i.e. location of deposition, of the wedge of weaksupport material from slice to slice, to enable construction of (andsubsequent easy separation of) the folds of the thick helix of strongmaterial constructed within the support construction volume.

As depicted in FIG. 2B, exemplary Layers F and G are separated by over2000 very thin layer slices. The wedge of weaker support material may beexpected to have rotated a number of times during the course ofdeposition of the intervening over 2000 slices. At the same time thecriss-cross area representing the object being fabricated has becomethicker during the same course of deposition of over 2000 slices, as theconcave object (represented in FIG. 1 by volume 124) is graduallyfabricated from bottom to top. Layer H, being over 1700 slices higherthan previously depicted layer G, depicts top slices of the concaveobject being fabricated, such slices forming the top of the object abovethe support construction and thus comprised entirely of modelingmaterial (only criss-cross).

Layers comprising the support construction may substantially fill asupport construction volume, within, adjacent to and/or beneath at leastpart of the object construction. Not clearly visible in FIG. 2B is avery thin release layer e.g. a seam of weaker second material depositedon a boundary or circumference of a part of a layer comprising thesupport construction, between the supporting materials forming thesupport construction and the volume of modeling material forming theobject. Positioning of the release layer may be exemplified by the blackcircle surrounding the inner diagonal lined and dotted areasrepresenting the support construction.

Reference is now made to FIG. 3A, a schematic diagram of a cut away sideview of a support construction in accordance with an embodiment of theinvention, to FIG. 3B, a schematic diagram of a cut away three-quartersside view of the concave object being printed, showing graphically inits center the support construction volume, divided into layers, with acommon central vertical axis (represented in FIG. 3A as 308 and in FIG.3B as 408), to FIG. 3C, a view of a concave object having a supportconstruction in its cavity, which support construction is in process ofbeing pulled or lifted out of the volume, and to FIG. 3D, a view of asupport construction lifted away in its entirety from a volume, inaccordance with an embodiment of the invention.

In some embodiments, a cut away view of a support construction 300 mayshow for example a continuous spiral coil or helix of hi-tensilestrength material 304 interspersed, e.g. separated by weaker supportmaterial 302 filling the spaces within and between the layers ofhi-tensile strength material 304. In some embodiments, supportconstruction 300 may be removed from a volume by pulling or lifting ofan edge 306 of strong material for example by, at or near a top or outersurface of support construction 300 and thus accessible to a user oroperator, as may be seen, e.g. in FIG. 3C.

In a preferred embodiment, a spiral, coil or helix of strong material304 is printed or deposited as part of the layer-by-layer 3D printingprocess such that a middle or other common area throughout the layers ofsupport construction 300 shares a vertical axis 308. In someembodiments, shared vertical axis 308 allows a user to peel away andthus lift support material 304 such that it may be removed in itsentirety as a ribbon, continuous sheet, spiral or screw shape of strongmaterial 304, as shown in FIG. 3D. Other configurations or placements ofstrong material 304 within a support volume are possible to generateother shapes of the removed support construction 300.

The thin portions of support material 302 interspersed within, amongstand between layers of strong material 304 forming the helical supportconstruction, being a weaker, gel-like material, enables easy and swiftseparation of the folds of the helix, thus facilitating its removal.

The thin support material, being weakly contacted at its interface withthe stronger material and with the same weak support material inpreceding and subsequent layers, is mostly lifted out of the supportconstruction volume together with, e.g. by clinging to the helix ofhi-tensile strength material.

FIG. 3B shows schematically the walls of a concave object 400 printedaround a support construction volume 402. Said support construction isformed in layers of first supporting material 404, together with aseparating second support material 406 to form a helical structurewithin the volume. In the construction as shown in FIG. 3B, all supportconstruction layers share a central vertical axis 408.

FIG. 3C, as aforesaid, shows a view of a concave object with a supportconstruction constructed as described herein within its cavity, whichsupport construction is beginning to be pulled or lifted out of thevolume by a user or operator. FIG. 3D shows the same helical supportconstruction, i.e. strip of stronger material 304 around a vertical axis308 after having been removed or lifted in its entirety out of thesupport construction volume. Remnants of weaker support material 302clinging to the helical strip and removed together with it are evident.

While certain features of the invention have been illustrated anddescribed herein, many modifications, substitutions, changes, andequivalents will now occur to those of ordinary skill in the art. It is,therefore, to be understood that the appended claims are intended tocover all such modifications and changes as fall within the true spiritof the invention.

The invention claimed is:
 1. A temporary support constructionconstructed within a volume designed to be an empty space in athree-dimensional object after removal of the temporary supportconstruction from said volume, the temporary support constructioncomprising: a strip of a first material intersecting horizontal layersin said volume; and a second material in said horizontal layers thatfills at least a portion of the volume not filled by the first material,wherein both the temporary support construction and thethree-dimensional object are constructed concurrently bythree-dimensional inkjet printing, wherein said first material has atensile strength sufficient to remove at least a portion of thetemporary support construction from the volume upon application of alifting force on the strip.
 2. The support construction of claim 1,wherein the strip is a continuous strip.
 3. The support construction ofclaim 1, wherein the strip is configured as a helix.
 4. The supportconstruction of claim 1, wherein the strip is configured as a coil. 5.The support construction of claim 1, wherein the second material islocated at a circumference of said horizontal layers.
 6. The supportconstruction of claim 1, wherein the support construction is configuredto be removed from the volume upon application of a lifting force on thestrip.
 7. The support construction of claim 1, wherein the supportconstruction includes an area of the second material surrounding thehorizontal layers.
 8. The support construction of claim 1, wherein thesupport construction is formed by a three-dimensional (3D) inkjetprinting system.
 9. The support construction of claim 1, wherein thestrip extends from a bottom layer of the volume to a top layer of thevolume.
 10. The support construction of claim 1, wherein the secondmaterial interfaces with the first material in each of the horizontallayers.